It marked the first time Ottawa was blanked since Dec. 14, 2006. Toskala, meanwhile, recorded his first shutout since March 16, when he was still a member of the San Jose Sharks.

''We just beat what is probably the best team in the league,'' Toskala said. ''Hopefully we get a confidence boost from this win, because we've been going up and down.''

Darcy Tucker broke a scoreless tie with 45 seconds remaining in the second period (700K ), when the Leafs’ agitator scored on a power play. After Ottawa goaltender Martin Gerber — who lost for only the second time this season in 14 decisions — stopped a blast from the point by Bryan McCabe, Tucker controlled the rebound and slammed it into an open net for his second goal of the season.

''I think that was the best this team has played all year,'' said McCabe. ''We knew we had to bring our best against the hottest team in hockey.

Toskala’s biggest save of the night came early in the second period. Moments after Toronto’s Alex Steen shot one of the goalpost, the Senators came down on a 3-on-1, but the Leafs’ netminder stood tall to keep Ottawa off the scoreboard (700K ).

''Toskala didn't have to make a lot of saves, but he made a few that kept it scoreless early,'' Senators defenseman Wade Redden said. ''We've just got to have a little more excitement. It seemed like that game kind of lulled us a bit. We've got to have a lot more energy.''

Sundin gave Toronto a 2-0 lead with another power-play goal at 6:03 of the third period (700K ). With Redden off for interference, Sundin got his 10th goal of the season on a slap shot from the circle that snuck between Gerber’s right leg and the post.

Jiri Tlusty rounded out the scoring with his first tally since Oct. 25, when he scored twice in his NHL debut. With 4:05 left in regulation, Tlusty picked up a loose rebound and skated around the net before stuffing it past Gerber (700K ).

''They played well defensively,'' Senators captain Daniel Alfredsson said. ''Special teams play was the difference. They scored two power-play goals to win them the game.''

Strudwick, who entered the game with no points in his last 13 contests, got behind Pittsburgh defenseman Sergei Gonchar and finished off a 2-on-1 with Mara, giving the Rangers their fifth straight win and nine in 10 games.

“There’s two defensemen jumping up in the play there; that doesn’t happen very often,” Strudwick said. “You just go to the net and hope the guy finds you. I just hoped that my stick hits it in, and that time I shovel-pushed it in.”

New York erased an early 2-0 deficit with three goals in the second period. Rozsival scored twice in less than three minutes (700K ,700K ) to tie the game, while Girardi — who was promoted to the top unit after the Rangers went 0-for-5 on the man advantage in Thursday’s 4-3 shootout win at Philadelphia — got a power-play goal with 1:25 remaining (700K ) to give the Rangers their first lead of the night.

“You’ve got to really try to get scoring from all areas,” Strudwick said. “You look at the teams that are successful, they have guys that can score on the back end. I think Rosie’s a guy that’s really underrated in the whole league. He’s a great defenseman. He’s got a good shot. The forwards have bailed us out lots of times, so we’re just trying to help where we can.”

Pittsburgh was held to one shot on goal in the third period before Petr Sykora erased the one-goal deficit with just over five minutes to play (700K ). Evgeni Malkin set up the play with a cross-ice feed for his 20th assist of the season, extending his points streak to 13 games.

Sidney Crosby had a goal (700K ) and an assist in the first period, giving the Penguins’ captain at least a point in 19 straight games — tops in the NHL. On this night, though, it was New York’s defensemen who shined.

''When you have tight hockey like that, often times those defensemen are very much part of the offense,'' Rangers coach Tom Renney said. ''Under the circumstances, it is a little unique but I don't care if the trend continues.''

Crosby was disappointed to see his team waste a two-goal lead against the red-hot Rangers, who received another solid performance from goaltender Henrik Lundqvist (20 saves).

''We had a two-goal lead early and weren't able to build on it,'' Crosby said. ''Lundqvist held them in the game. We get that third goal, we bury them.''

Coyotes 1, Kings 0 | VideoIlya Bryzgalov wanted to be a No.1 goaltender. While he didn’t receive that opportunity with the Anaheim Ducks, Phoenix was more than willing to give him his shot. Judging by what he accomplished in his first start as a Coyote, it appears as if he’s ready to show he has what it takes to be a starter.

After being picked up off waivers by Phoenix on Friday, Bryzgalov made 28 saves in his debut and blanked Los Angeles at the Staples Center for his third career shutout. It indeed was an exciting moment for Bryzgalov, who had met his new teammates only hours earlier.

''When I walked into the locker room, my new teammates were so excited to see me and made me feel like I had always been here,'' said Bryzgalov, who was Jean-Sebastien Giguere's backup in Anaheim.

Coyotes coach Wayne Gretzky was impressed by the way Bryzgalov performed, considering he only called the netminder about four hours before the opening faceoff to let him know he would be starting.

''He gets a call, I guess probably two minutes after nine today, saying that we got him — and another call five minutes later from me, saying 'You're going to play at 1 o'clock,'” Gretzky said. “So I knew it was probably going to be a hard day for him and emotional day because 24 hours before he didn't know what team he was going to end up with.

Phoenix captain Shane Doan scored the game’s lone goal at 11:24 of the second period (700K ). With his team on a two-man advantage, Doan fired a shot through a screen that found its way past Kings goaltender Jason LaBarbera, ending a scoring drought of 202:24 for the Coyotes. It was the only blemish for LaBarbera, who finished with 37 saves.

''Obviously, they made a good decision getting him,'' LaBarbera said of Bryzgalov. ''I'm sure he wanted to play well for a new team. What are you going to do? It's frustrating to lose one of those games.''

Doan deflected all of the credit to Bryzgalov, who handed Los Angeles its first shutout on home ice since April 6, 2006, when Vesa Toskala — then of the San Jose Sharks — made 14 saves in a 5-0 blowout.

''Obviously, Anaheim was blessed to have two great goaltenders, and now was his time to get a chance somewhere else,'' Doan said. ''You're always trying to find the best goalie available. So if you can get him, you're better off.''

Canadiens 7, Bruins 4 | VideoTim Thomas will probably see the Montreal Canadiens in his sleep, considering the Boston goaltender made 45 saves and still allowed seven goals. In what was at first a seesaw affair, the Habs pulled away with three tallies in the third period en route to a wild win at the Bell Centre.

Glen Murray scored twice (700K, 700K ), while Zdeno Chara (700K ) and Marco Sturm (700K ) also scored for the Bruins, who dropped to 9-7-2. Afterwards, Murray rightfully felt awful for the way his team failed to do more for its goalie in the third period.

''He's played great for us the whole season, no question about it,'' Murray said of Thomas. ''You can't fault him on what happened. He's kept us in every game all year and we didn't bail him out tonight.''

Carey Price made 32 saves for the Canadiens, who have won four of their last six games and improved to 11-5-3. He stopped seven of eight shots in the third period as most of the action was on the other end of the ice.

''It was a pretty entertaining game,'' Price said. ''I think it was a pretty fun game to watch for a fan. It had pretty much everything in it.''

It certainly had offense. Hamrlik, who gave Montreal a 5-3 lead at 4:23 of the third period (700K ), said the game plan was the same after the second period, when his team was clinging to a one-goal lead.

''It seemed like we'd get the lead and then make one big mistake and let them score,'' said Hamrlik, whose goal came during a 4-on-4 situation. ''We knew we didn't want to change anything after the second period and we came out hard.''

Trailing 3-2 entering the third period, Patrick Sharp scored three times in the last 20 minutes, giving the Blackhawks their fourth straight win over Detroit and their second in as many games at Joe Louis Arena, where they’re the only visiting team to win this season.

Rene Bourque scored a pair of shorthanded goals (700K ) for Chicago (11-8-1), which tied a team record with three on the night. Nikolai Khabibulin made 39 saves for the Blackhawks, who took advantage of a struggling Dominik Hasek by beating the Detroit netminder four times on just 16 shots. Hasek has allowed eight goals on the last 23 shots he’s faced.

''I don't know what to say,'' Hasek said. ''Of course when you give up so many goals on so few shots, you can't say you played well. I have to make more saves.”

Sharp put Chicago ahead with a shorthanded goal with 6:52 to play in regulation (700K ). The speedy forward went in alone on a breakaway after Red Wings defenseman Nicklas Lidstrom lost his balance at the Blackhawks’ blue line. Sharp also scored 4:30 into the third period (700K ), and added an empty-net tally with 30 seconds left for the hat trick (700K ). Sharp now has 10 goals — four of them shorthanded.

''It was fun,'' Sharp said. ''We talked after the second period. The game could have been lost in the first 40 minutes, but Nikolai Khabibulin kept us in it.''

Bourque became the eighth player in franchise history to score two shorthanded goals in the game. His second of the night, which came 7:11 into the second period (700K ), gave Chicago a 2-1 lead.

''We're going to be a little more aggressive when we can (while killing penalties),'' Blackhawks coach Denis Savard said. ''We got the bounces, let's face it.''

''One-goal game and we were outplaying them,'' Detroit forward Kris Draper said. ''But the team hangs around, and every time they got an opportunity, they seemed to take advantage of it. Then a couple of mistakes in our end, and we're down by one.''

Hurricanes 2, Panthers 1
A video replay in the third period awarded Rod Brind’Amour his second goal of the night, helping Carolina avoid the possibility of losing its third straight.

Florida – which has now lost six of its last eight games – had a chance to tie the game late in

the third, when it was handed an 83-second two-man advantage after both Brind’Amour and Glen Wesley were sent to the box. But the Panthers failed to get the equalizer as the Hurricanes picked up their 12th win of the season.

''I think we played the game with a purpose,'' Carolina coach Peter Laviolette said. ''We still could get better on certain things, but certainly, a good team effort under the circumstances.''

Brind’Amour gave the Hurricanes a 1-0 lead midway through the first period on a give-and-go with Cory Stillman. With Carolina on a power play, Brind’Amour was able to finish off the play as he fired a shot past Panthers goalie Tomas Vokoun, who finished with 31 saves.

''We did play pretty hard, but you don't get any points for that,'' Vokoun said. ''We didn't score, had a huge change at the end there. Those are the deciding moments.''

Brind’Amour put his team up by a pair 2:44 into the third period, when he took a pass from Mike Commodore and slipped the puck past Vokoun. The goal was originally waved off, but replays concluded that Brind’Amour had in fact scored.

''The way this sport is, you're happy if you win, and if you lose, you're miserable,'' Brind'Amour said. ''We had a little more jump tonight. The guys stepped it up.''

Nathan Horton ruined Cam Ward’s shutout bid with 6:01 remaining in regulation. The Panthers’ forward was able to redirect a shot from Olli Jokinen past Ward, who was caught at the left side of the net. Ward made 27 saves in the victory.

The Blues’ netminder made 35 saves through three periods and overtime before stopping all three attempts in the shootout as St. Louis — the last team to reach avoid this season — skated away with the two points at the Sommet Center.

''He really stood on his head, especially in the shootout,'' said Blues forward Paul Kariya, who played his first game back in Nashville since leaving during the offseason as a free agent. ''Obviously, he made some huge saves. He was solid for us. And he's such a great guy and such a hardworking guy, it's nice to get a win for him.''

Radulov (700K ) and Jordin Tootoo (700K ) scored for the Predators, who entered Saturday’s action with a 6-0-1 record in their last seven games and 8-1-1 in their last 10. Afterwards, Nashville coach Barry Trotz wasn’t exactly steaming. In the end, Toivonen was the difference.

''It is sort of one of those feelings where you go in the room and can't believe you lost,'' Trotz said. ''We weren't able to get two or three goals and get a big lead. They hung around, and it went to a shootout and anything can happen.''

Boyes also scored in regulation for the Blues (700K ), as did rookie David Perron (700K ), as St. Louis improved to 2-0 against the Predators this season. The teams will meet again on Monday night.

''We've just got to keep winning,'' Boyes said. ''You look at the standings, you know we're winning. You don't move up ... because it's so tight and such a tough division.''

After being frustrated early by the play of Edmonton goalie Mathieu Garon, Lombardi broke a scoreless tie when he finished off a 2-on-1 with Nolan to give the Flames a 1-0 lead (). The tally broke Garon’s shutout streak at 106:42.

“We've been working hard,” Nolan said. “It's nice to finally get some results. We got a bounce. If we keep working hard, good things will happen.”

Calgary quickly took a two-goal lead, as Nolan collected a loose puck near the Oilers’ net and roofed a backhander over Garon to make it 2-0. It was Nolan’s second goal of the season.

“I think we were a little flat in the first two periods,” Garon said. “I think we played hard in the third period, but it was a little too late. It’s always tough to give up a couple of goals late in the second period against a good team.”

The Flames went up by three midway through the third period when Craig Conroy collected Alex Tanguay’s feed from behind the net and fired a shot through Garon’s legs to make it 3-0. It was just the third goal of the season for Conroy, who was threatened by coach Mike Keenan with losing his job on the top line with Tanguay and Jarome Iginla.

“I think it’s a message to me,” Conroy said. “If you like it there and you want to be with those guys, you’ve got to start doing a little bit more. You’ve got to get some points and produce, and we have to win. If you’re winning and you’re not getting points, it’s not as bad. But when you’re losing and you’re on the top line, it seems like it falls squarely on your shoulders.”

Edmonton ended Miikka Kiprusoff’s shutout bid when Andrew Cogliano picked up a rebound at the side of the Flames’ net and put one off the Calgary netminder’s skate and over the line to make it 3-1 with 7:27 left. Edmonton was held to just 16 shots on goal.

“I thought at the start, we looked tired,” Oilers coach Craig MacTavish said. “We couldn't move the puck. We were rigid, tight on the back end. We were more aggressive in the third period. I don't know if it was the product of three games in four nights. We didn't have any jump, physically or mentally.”

"I thought I got it actually," Sharks goalie Evgeni Nabokov said of Perry’s shot. "He did a great move and he put the puck upstairs. I went for a desperation save after that."

The Sharks entered the night winners of four consecutive games, but Devin Setoguchi, Patrick Marleau and Joe Pavelski came up empty against Giguere in the breakaway session. Anaheim’s win streak began against San Jose with a shootout victory on Nov. 9.

“It was a good effort," said Giguere. "We've been winning a few games lately, but we were not happy with the way we were playing. All we were looking for was a 60- minute effort — or 65, in this case. I think we did that.”

The Ducks, now 10-8-3, took a 1-0 lead on a goal by Chris Kunitz at 15:24 of the first period and maintained that edge until 7:03 the third, when Torrey Mitchell finally solved Giguere with his fourth goal of the season. It took a deflection to do so, as Mitchell was able to redirect a blast from the point by defenseman Sandis Ozolinsh.

"I don't know if you can say we're finding our groove, we've won four in a row but three of them are in shootouts," said Ducks coach Randy Carlyle. "We're not going to get too high on what we've accomplished. We've sure had our fair share of struggles early in the season and for whatever the reason but we're starting to get a understanding of how we have to play and our hockey club has to play a strong forechecking game and be physical in order for us to be effective."

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